Tuesday, 16 November 2021

Black Widow #12 - Marvel Comics

BLACK WIDOW No. 12, December 2021
Restricted to just twenty pages, Kelly Thompson somehow manages to cover an incredible amount of ground with her script for Issue Twelve of “Black Widow”. Indeed, the Eisner Award-winner's technique of populating this periodical with a number of insights into the leading cast members’ motivations, followed by an increasingly fraught covert mission to infiltrate a mysterious “high society group” arguably allows her to pen the perfect mix of characterisation and action-packed super-heroic action; “Next time you wish to use me as a pommel horse, please ask.”

One such success is undoubtedly the sense of vulnerability the American author manages to imbue this comic’s titular character with straight from the start. It’s debatably difficult to imagine Natasha Romanoff having any sort of weakness, but the Avenger’s obsession as to how her infant son is developing whilst in hiding from her deadly foes is wonderfully written, as is her evident anger at the Winter Soldier when she chides him for letting her people find James and Stevie despite him supposedly protecting their identities from such enquiries.

Likewise, the unfurling of Romanova’s plan to discover just what is actually occurring at the Golden Gate Gala is equally as well delivered, with all the ex-Soviet spy’s numerous contingencies quickly failing during the time it takes for a single dance with the annual benefit’s glamorous host. Considering that a number of players within this game are Avengers, such as the smart-mouthed Hawkeye, the dread slowly creeping across Black Widow as she is increasingly outwitted by her unknown foe is actually quite palpable.

Adding enormously to the deepening sense of fear in the former KGB agent is Elena Casagrande’s pencilling, which goes a long way to show just how decadently opulent and disconcertingly violent San Francisco’s criminal world is. Natasha and Yelena Belova’s pulse-pounding battle with a corridor of animal mask-wearing goons is probably the highlight of this comic. Yet it is the Italian illustrator’s handling of Romanoff catching sight of the mythic Living Blade at this book’s end which will most likely remain within the reader’s mind, courtesy of some wonderful blurring of her line art so as to provide some forced perspective, and a truly haunted look in the defector’s piercing green eyes.

The regular cover art of "BLACK WIDOW" #12 by Adam Hughes

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